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IAPP CIPT Exam - Topic 6 Question 122 Discussion

SCENARIOPlease use the following to answer the next question:Chuck, a compliance auditor for a consulting firm focusing on healthcare clients, was required to travel to the client's office to perform an onsite review of the client's operations. He rented a car from Finley Motors upon arrival at the airport as so he could commute to and from the client's office. The car rental agreement was electronically signed by Chuck and included his name, address, driver's license, make/model of the car, billing rate, and additional details describing the rental transaction. On the second night, Chuck was caught by a red light camera not stopping at an intersection on his way to dinner. Chuck returned the car back to the car rental agency at the end week without mentioning the infraction and Finley Motors emailed a copy of the final receipt to the address on file.Local law enforcement later reviewed the red light camera footage. As Finley Motors is the registered owner of the car, a notice was sent to them indicating the infraction and fine incurred. This notice included the license plate number, occurrence date and time, a photograph of the driver, and a web portal link to a video clip of the violation for further review. Finley Motors, however, was not responsible for the violation as they were not driving the car at the time and transferred the incident to AMP Payment Resources for further review. AMP Payment Resources identified Chuck as the driver based on the rental agreement he signed when picking up the car and then contacted Chuck directly through a written letter regarding the infraction to collect the fine.After reviewing the incident through the AMP Payment Resources' web portal, Chuck paid the fine using his personal credit card. Two weeks later, Finley Motors sent Chuck an email promotion offering 10% off a future rental.How can Finley Motors reduce the risk associated with transferring Chuck's personal information to AMP Payment Resources?
A) By providing only the minimum necessary data to process the violation notice and masking all other information prior to transfer.
B) By requesting AMP Payment Resources delete unnecessary datasets and only utilize what is necessary to process the violation notice.
C) By obfuscating the minimum necessary data to process the violation notice and require AMP Payment Resources to secure store the personal information.
D) By transferring all information to separate datafiles and requiring AMP Payment Resources to combine the datasets during processing of the violation notice.

IAPP CIPT Exam - Topic 6 Question 122 Discussion

Actual exam question for IAPP's CIPT exam
Question #: 122
Topic #: 6
[All CIPT Questions]

SCENARIO

Please use the following to answer the next question:

Chuck, a compliance auditor for a consulting firm focusing on healthcare clients, was required to travel to the client's office to perform an onsite review of the client's operations. He rented a car from Finley Motors upon arrival at the airport as so he could commute to and from the client's office. The car rental agreement was electronically signed by Chuck and included his name, address, driver's license, make/model of the car, billing rate, and additional details describing the rental transaction. On the second night, Chuck was caught by a red light camera not stopping at an intersection on his way to dinner. Chuck returned the car back to the car rental agency at the end week without mentioning the infraction and Finley Motors emailed a copy of the final receipt to the address on file.

Local law enforcement later reviewed the red light camera footage. As Finley Motors is the registered owner of the car, a notice was sent to them indicating the infraction and fine incurred. This notice included the license plate number, occurrence date and time, a photograph of the driver, and a web portal link to a video clip of the violation for further review. Finley Motors, however, was not responsible for the violation as they were not driving the car at the time and transferred the incident to AMP Payment Resources for further review. AMP Payment Resources identified Chuck as the driver based on the rental agreement he signed when picking up the car and then contacted Chuck directly through a written letter regarding the infraction to collect the fine.

After reviewing the incident through the AMP Payment Resources' web portal, Chuck paid the fine using his personal credit card. Two weeks later, Finley Motors sent Chuck an email promotion offering 10% off a future rental.

How can Finley Motors reduce the risk associated with transferring Chuck's personal information to AMP Payment Resources?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A

To reduce the risk associated with transferring Chuck's personal information, Finley Motors should adhere to the principle of data minimization, which involves sharing only the data necessary for the specific purpose. In this case, they should provide AMP Payment Resources with only the essential details required to process the violation notice, such as Chuck's name, contact information, and details of the infraction, while masking any other non-essential information. This approach minimizes the exposure of personal data and aligns with best practices outlined by the IAPP for protecting personal information.


IAPP Certification Textbooks, specifically those sections covering data minimization and secure data handling practices.

'Principles of Data Protection: Data Minimization,' IAPP Privacy Handbook.

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